Cooperative methylation of human tRNA3Lys at positions A58 and U54 drives the early and late steps of HIV-1 replication

Nucleic Acids Res. 2021 Nov 18;49(20):11855-11867. doi: 10.1093/nar/gkab879.

Abstract

Retroviral infection requires reverse transcription, and the reverse transcriptase (RT) uses cellular tRNA as its primer. In humans, the TRMT6-TRMT61A methyltransferase complex incorporates N1-methyladenosine modification at tRNA position 58 (m1A58); however, the role of m1A58 as an RT-stop site during retroviral infection has remained questionable. Here, we constructed TRMT6 mutant cells to determine the roles of m1A in HIV-1 infection. We confirmed that tRNA3Lys m1A58 was required for in vitro plus-strand strong-stop by RT. Accordingly, infectivity of VSV-G pseudotyped HIV-1 decreased when the virus contained m1A58-deficient tRNA3Lys instead of m1A58-modified tRNA3Lys. In TRMT6 mutant cells, the global protein synthesis rate was equivalent to that of wild-type cells. However, unexpectedly, plasmid-derived HIV-1 expression showed that TRMT6 mutant cells decreased accumulation of HIV-1 capsid, integrase, Tat, Gag, and GagPol proteins without reduction of HIV-1 RNAs in cells, and fewer viruses were produced. Moreover, the importance of 5,2'-O-dimethyluridine at U54 of tRNA3Lys as a second RT-stop site was supported by conservation of retroviral genome-tRNALys sequence-complementarity, and TRMT6 was required for efficient 5-methylation of U54. These findings illuminate the fundamental importance of tRNA m1A58 modification in both the early and late steps of HIV-1 replication, as well as in the cellular tRNA modification network.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • HEK293 Cells
  • HIV-1 / physiology*
  • HeLa Cells
  • Humans
  • Membrane Proteins / genetics
  • Membrane Proteins / metabolism
  • Methylation
  • Mice
  • Mutation
  • RNA Processing, Post-Transcriptional*
  • RNA, Transfer, Lys / chemistry
  • RNA, Transfer, Lys / metabolism*
  • Virus Replication*

Substances

  • CRLS1 protein, human
  • Membrane Proteins
  • RNA, Transfer, Lys